Advance file photoCourt papers say Gabrielle Vignolini was held in a 120th Precinct cell from 7 p.m. on Aug. 24, 2010, until noon the next day.

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- A masseuse who alleged she was wrongfully detained last year and forced to clean a jail-cell floor soiled by an overflowing toilet inside a St. George police station has settled her lawsuit against the city for $4,000.

Gabrielle Vignolini, 31, maintains she spent 17 hours in a “filthy, unhygienic cell” after being arrested during a raid on a Stapleton beauty salon on Aug. 24, 2010.

The New Jersey mother of three said she was released without so much as a summons. Prosecutors declined to charge her.

In June, Ms. Vignolini filed a civil lawsuit in Brooklyn federal court against the city and several unnamed officers.

She alleged civil rights violations, false arrest, negligence and infliction of emotional distress stemming from the incident at Morounfola Beauty Spa on Water Street.

She sought unspecified monetary damages.

The action was recently settled, according to papers filed with the court.

Under the agreement, the city and the officers made no admissions of violating Ms. Vignolini’s rights or of breaking any laws.

“The settlement is in the best interests of all the parties,” said Matthew J. Modafferi, the city lawyer who represented the defendants. He added nothing further.

Court papers say Ms. Vignolini was held in a 120th Precinct cell from 7 p.m. on Aug. 24, 2010, until noon the next day.

She contends the cell’s water fountain was broken and the toilet was overflowing and depositing waste and water onto the floor. Despite those conditions, cops allegedly denied her request to be placed in another lockup.

Just before her release, a female officer allegedly ordered Ms. Vignolini and the spa owner to wipe up the sodden cell floor.

“You’re not leaving until you clean that up,” court papers quote the cop as barking.

The city denied the allegations in court papers.

Ms. Vignolini alleges she was never issued a summons or arraigned on any criminal charges.

An NYPD spokesman previously said the district attorney’s office declined to prosecute Ms. Vignolini for unlicensed massaging.

A spokesman for District Attorney Daniel Donovan confirmed that the office declined to charge Ms. Vignolini. He could provide no further details.